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The federal judge has ordered President Donald Trump’s administration to return a man in the United States after he was improperly deported to El Salvador.
Before issuing the decision on Friday, referee Paul Sjinis called Kilmar Abrego’s deportation of “illegal action” and condemned Trump’s administration’s lawyers for the lack of answers to basic questions related to the incident.
Abrego Garcia, 29, was taken to a deportation flight to Salvador in March, despite the immigration judge’s 2019 decision, which protected him from expulsion, taking into account the possible persecution of the local gangs in his homeland.
“His constant presence in El Salvador for obvious reasons is irreversible harm,” the judge told the Department of Homeland Security and other agencies.
Despite immigration officials and even the White House, recognizing that Abrego Garcia has been deported into “mistakes”, Trump’s officials have been challenging in their reply.
White House spokeswoman Karline Leavitt insisted this week that Maryland resident is a member of the MS-13 gang, referring to the evidence of unpaid.
“The administration retains the position that this individual, who was deported to Salvador and will not return to our country, was a member of the brutal and vicious MS-13 gang,” said Leavitt.
Abrego Garcia’s lawyers have said there is no evidence that their client was MS-13, saying that the statement was based on the confidential informant’s claim in 2019. The informant said Abrego Garcia is a member of the gang department in New York, where he had never lived.
During the Friday hearing, the lawyer of the Department of Justice, Erez Ruven, could not tell the judge in accordance with the authority of Abrego Garcia, who was legally authorized to work in the US, was arrested before his expulsion.
“I am also frustrated that I have no answers about many of these questions,” he said.
Meanwhile, Abregego Garcia’s lawyer Simon Sandovals-Moshenberg chose the inactivity of Trump’s administration.
“Lots of tweets. Lots of White House press conferences. But there are no real measures taken with the Salvador government to be right,” he said.
“The apology would be nice, but I didn’t expect it,” he added.
In the center of the company near Hyattsville, Maryland, Abrego Garcia’s wife said she hadn’t spoken to her husband since he was flying to Salvador.
Jennifer Vasqueza Sura, a US citizen, encouraged supporters to continue the fight for his husband “and all the kilmars there, whose stories are still waiting to hear”.
“All wives, mothers, children who also face this cruel separation, I stand with you in this pain,” she said
The receipt occurs when the Trump’s administration has sought to correct the campaign’s commitment to prosperity, and Trump with the “invasion” with “invasion” is ranked without documents.
The authorities have increased their arrests, but expulsion has been more difficult, with most cases slowly passing through delayed immigration courts.
In March, the administration tried to quickly track the process, referring to the law of Alien Enemies in 1789, which allows foreign nationals to be expelled during the war.
Rights say the law denies a person’s proper process by submitting a court pointing to some of the 237 men deported in accordance with the law, along with Abrego Garcia, were only designed for tattoos or clothing that is believed to be related to Latin American gangs.
The judge has temporarily denied Trump’s use of the law.
He has determined whether the administration is violating his March 15 order, refusing to turn around on two deportation flights, one of which at the time carried Abrego Garcia, which was already in the air.